OIL prices rebounded from a 13-month low yesterday, pushing above US$81 a barrel after the dollar weakened and investors trickled back into financial markets on hopes that a globally coordinated rescue plan will stave off an economic crisis.
Prices were also supported by expectations that OPEC countries may tighten production in a bid to slow crude's precipitous decline prices have fallen about 45 percent since shooting to a record US$147.27 on July 11. Last week, crude tumbled more than US$16 to levels not seen since September 2007, with over half the losses coming on Friday alone.
Investors were calmer yesterday after European leaders agreed overnight to a raft of new measures aimed at strengthening the battered financial sector, including debt guarantees, recapitalizing banks and new oversight measures.
Meanwhile in Washington, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said his office would work quickly to implement a US$700 billion bank rescue plan, including a new measure to buy equity in struggling banks, rather than just their soured mortgage-related assets.
The Dow Jones industrial average shot up over 900 points for the day, snapping back from last weeks' devastating losses.
"The oil market really can't ignore these huge daily price swings in the stock market. When the stock market settles down, we can go back to trading oil on fundamentals rather than just broadbased economic deterioration," said Jim Ritterbusch, president of energy consultancy Ritterbusch and Associates in Galena, Illinois.
Light, sweet crude for November delivery rose US$3.49 to settle at US$81.19 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, after earlier rising as high as US$82.52. The contract fell Friday US$8.89 to US$77.70, the lowest price since September 10, 2007.
Though recovery in oil prices was to be expected after last week's steep decline, analysts doubted Monday's rally had relieved the intense downward pressure on crude.
Crude's steep pullback has caught some market observers off guard. Goldman Sachs, which for weeks maintained a bullish outlook on oil even as prices collapsed, yesterday cut its year-end crude price forecast from US$115 a barrel to US$70, citing the "extreme dislocation" in the credit markets.
"We clearly underestimated the depth and duration of the global financial crisis and its implications on economic growth and commodity demand," Goldman said.
Investors are watching for signs that the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries may cut production at an extraordinary meeting in Vienna on November 18.
Iranian Oil Minister Gholam Hossein Nozari on Saturday called for stability in the oil market, saying the biggest challenge now was a decline in oil demand because of a global economic recession.
"There won't likely be any overt cuts, but there could be an informal tweaking of production that could provide support for prices," said Victor Shum, an energy analyst at consultancy Purvin & Gertz in Singapore. "It's politically unacceptable for OPEC to make cuts in the middle of a global deceleration."
In other Nymex trading, heating oil futures rose 13.1 cents to settle at US$2.341 a gallon, while gasoline future added 11.06 cents to settle at US$1.9176 a gallon. Natural gas futures gained 14.4 cents to settle at US$7.333 per 1,000 cubic feet.
In London, November Brent crude rose US$3.37 to settle at US$77.46 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange.